Hall-effect Mediated Magnetic Flux Transport in Protoplanetary Disks
Xue-Ning Bai, James M. Stone

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the Hall effect influences magnetic flux transport in protoplanetary disks, revealing that it can significantly accelerate outward flux movement and shape magnetic field configurations, impacting disk evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed simulation study showing the dominant role of the Hall effect in magnetic flux transport, a process previously not well understood in protoplanetary disks.
Findings
Hall effect rapidly drags magnetic flux inward at the midplane
Anti-aligned magnetic fields lead to faster outward flux transport
Flux transport rate increases with disk magnetization
Abstract
The global evolution of protoplanetary disks (PPDs) has recently been shown to be largely controlled by the amount of poloidal magnetic flux threading the disk, which is further controlled by the poorly understood process of magnetic flux transport. In weakly ionized gas as in PPDs, magnetic flux is largely frozen in the electron fluid, except when resistivity is large. When the disk is largely laminar, we show that the relative drift between the electrons and ions (the Hall-drift), and the ions and neutral fluids (ambipolar-drift) can play a dominant role on the transport of magnetic flux. Using two-dimensional simulations that incorporate the Hall effect and ambipolar diffusion (AD) with prescribed diffusivities, we show that when large-scale poloidal field is aligned with disk rotation, the Hall effect rapidly drags magnetic flux inward at the midplane region, while it slowly pushes…
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